New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 8, 1926, Page 2

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THE NEW SILK DUSTER Protects the hands against injury and soiling Pure Silk Fringe Takes Up and Holds the Dust Without Spreading It 50(: each The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MAIN STREET J | Mo = ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. John F. Keaveny HAS EQUIPPED A " DENTAL OFFICE AP --321 Main St. Where He Will Conduct a General Practice of DENTISTRY DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN MOORE BROS. SANITARY FISH MARKET Is the Place to Select Your Sea Food. Large Variety and Fine Quality PORT NORRIS OYSTERS * First of the Season Live and Boiled Lobsters Live and. Boiled Shrimp Large Deep Sea Scallops Prime Soft Shell Crabs Eastern White Halibut Fresh Swordfish Fresh Salmon Fresh Mackerel Fresh Codfish Fresh Bluefish Striped Bass Silver Bass Large Native Eels Large Butterfish Large Shore Haddock Round and Long Clams Salt Cod 18c¢ Ib., 3 Ibs. 50¢ 30 COMMERCIAL ST. Open until 9 p. m. Thursday Telephone 1199 ELECTRIC TREATMENTS When given in connection with the Ultra-Violet Rays, Alpine Sun Rays, Electric Light Baths, Electrical Massage and Biolog- fcal lood Wash Treatments control all nervous conditions— Coughs and Chest Discases, Heart, Btomach, Liver and Ki ney Diseases, High or Low Blood Pressure, all forms of Rheuma- tism, including Neuritis and Sci- atica, or regardiess of what all- ment. These treatments are a God-send to the afflicted and to weak, slow-growing children F. Coombs NATUREOPATH 19 So. High 8t., Near Post Office Lady nurse in attendance Tel. 765 AUBURN TAXI PHONE 611 R ) — e JOHN J. TARRANT 288 East Main Street UNDERTAKER and EMBALMER PASTOR HALL USED OVER MRS. MILLS’ PICNIC DAINTIES TO MAKE A FUSS | Sure Relief FOR lNDIGESTION Charlotte Describes Her Mother’s Delight as She | Was Preparing Sand- wiches for Clergyman. (Copyright 1926, Famous Features Syndicate, Inc.) (Editor's Note: For the first time the true and significant back- lground of the famous Hall-Mills murder mystery is now being given to the public in “My Story,” by |Charlotte Mills, daughter of the |siain woman. In previous chapters of “My Story” Miss Mills has told of the life of drudgery {mother led, and of her friendship for the wealthy |Hall. Now go one with the a ing tale of this romance as told by the one living person who knows it [ best.) Rev Picnics and Fun TFor all our money had some good ttmes too. were the church pienics, for in- stance,—they were lots of fun er always took me along. | troubl She used to love fussing over the eats. Each lady would carry along| some special thing. Some would | make potato salad; some would bring | ; some would see to p‘,. plckles, cheese, ete, Mother al- | ways took sandwiches, ing and puttering Kitchen and knew how to |make Tovely German dishes—pot |roast, apple-cake, sausage-roll and uch wonderful sandwiches. Often |sha nsed to save something for \Tr | Hall when he eame around and h make a big fuss and enjoy ewyy |crumb. Mother would be as happy as a kid One day she was making sand- wiches to take to a picnfe. “We ‘must have a lot for Mr. Hall," she said. “What kind asked her. “Guess”. “Oh, some fancy stuff, T suppose. | Pregerves with chopped olives and cream cheese?” “Wrong”, sald mother. ‘Caviar! Not @ bit of it.” “Peanut butter and —> “Oh, you'll never guess. It tuna fish. {fish with my dressing. And he |loves a combination of tongue and cheese Wwith a little chopped pickle, | What do you think of that!” I thought it was funny, because Mr, Hall was 0 used to nice things |over at his home. 1 imagined u\lr\(‘mg they had was expensive land elegant, and T guess it was. Per- | haps that's why he used to like our | plain stuft. hitha does he like?” I I believe the two or three |before mother died were the hap- {piest of her whole life. Anyhow,| |she laughed more and sang, and ayer. We used to take | walks together just like two girls. As jolly as anything. We'd make comments on whatever saw, and ugh over what was funny. had a girl friend 1 liked better than mother. She used to talk a great deal in those days about our going off to-! gether, just her and I, and having a nice little home somewhers, 1 didn’t think very much about it; just left it all to her. But if she |had suddenly come to me and said: “Charlotte, we're going to move lout of here this very day and 1 | by ourselves,” I would have picked up my things and gone 1y, |without asking a question. 1'd have |known mother knew what she was about and would take care of us. As T look back, I see it in a lit- tle different light than I did then. I feel sure a plan had begun to form in both their minds Hall's first and then moth. ey would some time go aw: ew Brunswick. I don't think they ad any clear idea how, but that {they were determined to find a| {way: it not one way, |don't remember of thinking about |seemed it would happen. I would have gone |anywhere, anyhow, anytime, with mother, We always had good times at | Chrietmas. he German people {make a great 1 of Christmas, and my six aunts, (mother's sisters) and |four uncles (her brothers) made parties and presents and we all | visited and look at one another's trees, T generall much ea and pudding and got sick, but T had wonderful time anyho: That's another on of the thhgs T've got over, along with the movies—eat | ing too much. FEating never inter- it me any more, I certainly don't at from ther; he always werfect er about food. Mother could nage o please him most of the time but en he cooking sometimes m * him grum- H and sinee Mother's death, Fath- s and for my I clean up the but I leave most of him and he ate too er gets his own m brother Dan too, ¥ ind dust work for dolng it 1 hrv;w I haven't fmpression of my father or spoken ‘ ully. I have had one or trom Mothe o Iather. V r seemed to ¢ I and Mother under- ouse n a wron UPHOLSTERING Phone 4010 House: Chowder, Clams, Steaming Clams, Soft Shell Crabs, Lobsters, Crab Meat, Shrimps OYSTER HOUSE | THE HONISS 22 STATE ST. HARTFORL Under rGant’s Department Store SSIFIED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS the same she had th L that a s respectful to parents never 1 was naughty in that uffered for it. s your father,” f you can’t be anything better you can be obedient and silent.” | All the same she and T had our | ith him. Mostly over money I can’t remember any time Jn my life that we wercn't worrying | over the lack of money. That fs, | Mother and I worricd; Father was ygoing. He just seemed to | 1ive inside of himselt and doesn't | care very much about anything. It's | his way. Mother used to flars up | sometimes, but she wouldn't let me I raad a story in a newspaper late- Iy that said’ Mother used to make térribla scenes and “throw pleces of hrie-a-hras and aven strike my her. How terrible to write such she'd say, *| Four Prisoners and an Escort Were | Just plain ordinary tuna| .| terday led to a battle in which four | Dett, stated that he thought it best specd of mo miles | r--'——"“T -"_"“ 5| Mexicans and an Austrian were | {0 Dt the matter into the hands of hour. He was closcly followed | | HOME WET WASH | Killed, {the board for action fn any form it by his other two entries, the Misses | LAUNDR | | | Wour ot tadee slatn were hought most suftable, The matter | America IIT. and IV. | )/ The fifth wash the fat} was tabled for Inspection by Cily | 1, gccesstully defending the tro- | of the prisoners who, according to | Lngineer Jos D. Willia phy Wood accomplished a f I never| another. 1| {it at all except to be glad and hope | | points, lies about her! Never any such thing | happened in all my litetime. They lad their squabbles but as for hit- ting and throwing things—well it | 1s shamer The Mills men are peculiar, or so they seem to me. They are v s much .m,\.u Y 6 BELLANS Hot water Sure Relief 1 to say so. LAST REQUEST OF TWO request of Pearl W granted, their familles said today, heir bodies, each with a bullet LOYERS I NOT GRANTED rough the head, were found Tue huddled in an automo- bile. The note relating to the funes | ral was in iller's pocket. An au< tomatic pistol was found near with two chambers empty. Police believed the girl died first, but whether she killed herself, or whether Miller killed her and then killed himself, will never be known, oung Couple Asked That They Be Buried in One Grave— Murder and Saicide. Sept. 8 ( hite and E Keariley, Neb., ‘n.uum and don't c Miller, youthful sweethearts, who | A steam chamber, erected thre 0 o) ! he: e 1 ) o : '3“ rf‘xfiu. ‘1 uu‘u}\”l’v y feel :uyhf;fir; . EI I ANS are believed to have died in a | miles beneath the surface of tha W ] 2 em- | death pact, that a double funeral carth and connected by means of elves en to be me: 5 e of ;rjm )\;;).rv”nvp':yl . 0:rn- Ic 25 and 75¢ Packages Everywhere service be held and that they be pipes, may provide a source of ooy rysmiC Vet cledaty shoniihls burled in one grave will not be|power for the near tuture. Hy own mind. I never could under- in world that counts, and though I am only 20, T have seen d -up-and-get than their menfolks. | s character, that's what it is 1 el I People t e character get| . I S ey S S ar o | PTODErtY Owners Explain Toj ' Projects to City Board | ivantages 1 they have, or W ¢ men or women. I can vone should think a wo man isn't as good as a man, or as | useful or whatever you choose to About 25 merchants and property | call it, or should think themselves | gwners on Arch street attend ey aih't sobTio Hghito put us,ings of the two help | superior to other people, when | o ¥ tHe Boaxd | SHAt ” wolf from the oracter 18 the only thing that | NCaring at the board of pu |out of business” said kol | Mol fron ihe | 1ast evening in connection with the | willie Masso to the Herald came. miaRehianvliodyseupeIoL; to put us out of business?” 1 guess I'd better cultivate charac- | ProPosal to widen Arch street from |, a2t datied] whattho oy e 2 s s ’;',” T'm certainly not very pretty, | Walnut street to Grand strectd The |27 When ® ked what he thought|wilite, with the characteristic small ter, ainly ¥ PretY | b ronosed widening will give the city | Of the ambition of owners of per-|boy philosophy that the streets are mar 1. t shoe shine stands to rule off |a 40 or 42-foot stree accordi to which proposals is accepted by he street, the itinerant bootblacks: feel quite keenly at- e board. The first proposal embra Armed with small boxes on which are being made to put ’\,KALS_ widening the stret two feet on the they b nailed a block crudely business. “We ain‘t got Vol AT | east side and four feet on the w carved to represent a fodtrest, a no money like them guys and we| { while the second proposal is for an |dozen or more young men, future no lawyer,” said onc i | increase of two feet on the east side citlz Iped to supp them- | youn | (Tomorrow: Charlotte Mills tells | 204 SiX feet on the west. selves out of school hours and dur-| During the week vs Willie what her feelings are toward Mrs,| TWwo delegates from the South iDE summer vacation shining shoes ¢ rining shoes and 50 Hall, wife of the dead rector, who | church stated that they were in fa- O strect corners, he Herald in the late On Satur- rns as much man named and s e picture is typical. The eve young shown in t vor of widening the street at their | is being held in bail in connection property to promote better parking with the Hall-Mills murder.) e sometimes e | Copyright, 1926, Famous | conditions on the east side. At pres- | 50n o widow he is helping to sup- : 5 in a day ning shoes and | Features q,m.me Inc. ant parking is prohibited on t port hi his mother and a sis- papers. His week’s side except during church sorvices, |ter. Tho sister works in a depart- | way average $5 or and the combined earn- tare nr\mg will be permitted on ARMED TEXAS RIFLEMEN | votn siaes a ait times. boat, Excelsior-France, which quit| INVESTIGATE COMPLAINT Max J. Unkelbach, an enginecr, | the race and conceded the victory to Inv ating a complaint by stated that street could be |the defender after complet ' Glowacki of 100 Beaver a crippled motor. id to the | heat with is | challenge boa damaged in sk widened thout disturbing | present bullding lines and th would be the best course, ened to shoot| Anderson and it John Kra er street had thre him, Officers Charles have me | Killed in Ambush — Police in his Ly opinion. He was backed in this be- | to do but little better than 41 miles James McCabe learned that the men | 5 | Met by those presc n I during the time it re- pag an argument about a week Raymondville, Texas, Sept. 8. (P— | Louis R. Ray mained in the race and was nearly | g officers brought in a ¥ Posses were beating through heavy frad V nberger t s behind the | Miss | cariridge pistol from Krag brush northeast of here today in|Bennett. One of the petition V. when the heat was com- | ome. search of riflemen whose mpt | Stated that the petition called for a | pleted. | to ambush officers escorting prison- | 40-foot widening when signe }\ ut | Wood pi | ers to a purported arms cache yes- | fhe sponsor of the paper, Mr. Ben- nautical m than 61 to| Alderman David L. to the board an the 1 i IWASHESEVERYTHING ; tting the curb said he inten che of arms was | men in custody had |ing on - |at the Allen officers, ghow wh | has never been_d | | hidden. The | third Harmsworth vic im ahead of 8. F, plicat won rested following the an and slaying here Sheriff Leslic | Deputy Constable Louis Jose Munoz, off prisoner who had acc ading of his father, ] t in order I\u do ¢ rous cor- | ner at that point. Tt was moved I, the board to entertain a hearing on ed to the|the m Tomas, to| Work on the temporary Qe n full confession to his part|be given the Broad stree ying of Shaw and Mey and | connceling separate links of the and to lead officers to the cache of | sewer system at the interscetion of ATINS, Munoz insisted, according to | Broad etreet and other streets will they be accom- | bhe started tomorrow. The cost will suspects 500, and Frederick o did likewise for nid, was th in Cowes, trophy relief to t section by owned by Sir Ma American Derby \\mncr | Finally Receives Purse | the officers, that panied by other The men led them into th be abou | hmhw | fired from ambush. ‘The officers dropped to the ground and return- ed the fire, The prisoners, caught in cross-fire, were slain. Those n were Tomas Munoz Bradley stables has been | nt to him by the Illinois Jockey | Home wet Wash ious check sent Mr. | Laundry Detroit Sportsman Again Defends Title to the Harmsworth nd his sons, Jose and D Tre i 5 ophy Cinco Gonzales and Matt Zaller Ph » up their share of the fund Austrian, Detrolt, Sept. 8 (P—Gar Wood, shortage, now making the check ' ALL COPS ON DUTY Washington Patrolmen Will All Be payable, Detroit sportsman, today remained in posession of the Harmsworth tro- phy, emblematic of world speedhoat | Grasshoppers supremac; outh Ameri the government With Miss America V. he yester- maintains a special department to day defeated the French challenging |cope with their migrations, are such a pest in on Duty Monday During K. K. K Parade. Washington, 8 (M—The Ku| Klux kian parade to be held here | next Monday was declared today by he District of Columbia commis- | to constitute an ‘“‘emer-| necessitating the suspension oft for police officers on t Sept. | sion gen | of day: day o the march and the preceding | @ | | | *“Assembling of large numbers of | | ns to participate in and view M| ‘ | the parade of the Ku Klux klan and | @/ | the ceremonies incidental thercto, | |- | said the report of Major Edwin B I Hesse, superintendent of police, to M| Il the commissioners, *‘constitutes un‘ ‘ ) “ ! 1 emergency of such a nature as to | | require the continuops service of al members he metropolitan police | force. ¥rom the best information I ean securs the number parficipating of the parade of | will exceed t yours—go spend it as you ; “Here’s a check for $15,000. It’s [ But don’t ask my advice.” like or invest it however you see fit. | The eommissioners .m.mwd the | superintendent’s recommendation. LEADS HOCG [Nebraska Leather-Lunged Farmer I 1 Six Points to the | Neb., Sept. trom Of course you wouldn't. 8 (P—With corn belt | states “seede for later contests B oty A B Toh Warren of Hastings, Nebraska | ff{ Yet this is exactly what you do when you make your insur- 8 held the lead in the national hog B! . 2 . ¥ . by 2 I8 e o ! ance policies payable directly to her in a lump sum. Have you any [ Warren, with §1 out of 100 points, after two days of produeing hogland reason to suppose that she will welcome this responsibility more | m Is @ix points ahend of his when you are gone than she would today? nearest opponent. John W. White- Aot v T 1, Galesburg. Clyde Whitney Omaha musician and ex-farmer, is ; e e Why subject her to all the trouble and risk of handling this ; e money herself, perhaps making her the victim of designing I Pitch and expression gain 3 schemers or well-meaning friends, when a Life Insurance Trust - resonan volume 20 3 friendliness of appeal 20 would provide sure protection? —_—— ] Hersert E. ANDERSON Teacher Bulld And Help Open Saturday Evenings D.8T. J THE LOMMERLIAL L TRUSTCO. N ERTA ls Build VIOLIN - VIOLA ENSEMBLE PLAYING Studio: 242 Main Street Yellow Cab Follows the Path of Public Confidence The character of our drivers is a subjeet which is of paramount importance to you. You are the ones to suffer the effects of caveless driving or insolent conduct. It is our job to pick the kind of men who will not be guilty of either. That is the very foundation of our business. If we were to hire men because of their ability to drive—if we hired them without knowing their standing, personal attributes and clmacter we would be false to our obligations, and this cab company would never have reached its present high state of efficiency. It costs time and money and the work of many people to hire the kind of men we want, It doesn’t cost others anything to hire the other kind. And we are willing—even eager—to spend the money rather than to take a chance with your safety. We fully recognize the responsibility we assume when we send a man and a cab on the streets to haul you and your loved ones. Con- sequently we’ve got to know beyond a reasonable doubt who and what these men are before we hire them. We've got to know what their habits and associations have hbeen—whether they, have any tendency towards physical or mental de« fects—whether they have any inherited or ac- quired criminal taint. It’s the true road to public confidence. NEW BRITAIN PHONE 231 Yellow Cab Co. .Tel. 231 Pay What the Meter Reads Furnish Your Home the Way You Buy Your House Everyone who buys a house pays down but a small amount, and enjoys living in the new home while paying for it. Even if you rent a home by the year you pay a twelfth each month instead of all in advance. You can purchase your homefurnishings on the same plan. Pay whatever amount down that you can comfortably spare. Then use and enjoy the furniture you have bought while you are paying for it. You will be happier and more contented with your home in this way. We invite your account C. FULLER Co. 40-56 Ford Street, Hartford !

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